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So Big (1932 film)

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Genre
  
Drama, Romance

Story by
  
Language
  
English

7.3/10
IMDb

Director
  
Music director
  
W. Franke Harling

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

So Big (1932 film) movie poster

Writer
  
J. Grubb Alexander
,

Release date
  
April 30, 1932 (1932-04-30)

Based on
  
So Big1924 novel by Edna Ferber

Cast
  
(Selina Peake De Jong), (Roelf Pool), (Dirk De Jong - younger), (Miss Dallas O'Mara),
Mae Madison
(Julie Hempel), (Dirk De Jong)

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Self/less
,
The Face of Love
,
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
,
Savages
,
What's Eating Gilbert Grape
,
Finding Neverland

Tagline
  
Edna Ferber's epic of American Womanhood

So big 1932 barbara stanwyck and noel francis


So Big! is a 1932 American pre-Code drama film directed by William A. Wellman and starring Barbara Stanwyck. The screenplay by J. Grubb Alexander and Robert Lord is based on the 1924 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same title, without the exclamation point, by Edna Ferber.

Contents

So Big (1932 film) movie scenes

So Big! was the second full-scale screen adaptation of the Ferber novel. The first was a 1924 silent film of the same name directed by Charles Brabin and starring Colleen Moore. A 1953 remake was directed by Robert Wise and starred Jane Wyman. The story was also made as a short in 1930, with Helen Jerome Eddy.

So Big (1932 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters23975p23975

So big 1932 film review


Plot

So Big (1932 film) So Big 1932 film Wikipedia

Following the death of her mother, Selina Peake (Barbara Stanwyck) and her father (Robert Warwick) move to Chicago, where she enrolls in finishing school. Her father is killed, leaving her penniless, and Selina's friend Julie Hemple (Mae Madison) helps her find a job as a schoolteacher in a small Dutch community. Selina moves in with the Poole family and tutors their son Roelf (George Brent). Selina eventually marries immigrant farmer Pervus De Jong (Earle Foxe) and gives birth to Dirk (Hardie Albright), nicknamed "So Big", who becomes the primary focus of her life. When Pervus dies, Selina struggles to keep the farm afloat so she can afford to finance her son's education, hoping he will become an architect.

So Big (1932 film) So Big 1932 The Motion Pictures

Dirk becomes involved with a married woman, who arranges for him to get a job as a bond salesman in her husband's firm, making much more money than as an apprentice architect. Eventually he meets and falls in love with unconventional artist Dallas O'Mara (Bette Davis), but she refuses to marry him because of his lack of ambition. Roelf, now a renowned sculptor, meets Dirk and, learning Selina is his mother, reunites with his former tutor. She is pleased to know her influence helped mold Roelf's character, even as she accepts her own son's weaknesses and disappointments.

Cast

So Big (1932 film) So Big 1932 Movie classics

Cast notes:

So Big (1932 film) So Big 1932 IMDb

  • Bette Davis, cast in the relatively small role of Dallas O'Mara, filmed So Big! simultaneously with The Rich Are Always with Us. Following The Man Who Played God, it was her second film for Warner Bros., and the first in which she appeared with George Brent, who co-starred with her in eleven more films. Davis considered her casting in a prestigious Barbara Stanwyck project a sign Jack L. Warner was acknowledging her value to the studio. In her 1962 autobiography A Lonely Life, she recalled, "It was a source of tremendous satisfaction, and encouraged me to unheard-of dreams of glory.".
  • Critical reception

    So Big (1932 film) SO BIG 1932 In The Good Old Days Of Classic Hollywood

    Andre Sennwald of The New York Times called the film "a faithful and methodical treatment of Miss Ferber's novel, but without fire or drama or the vitality of the original." He added, "A fine actress, Miss Stanwyck seems ill-suited to a role that hustles her in jerky steps from girlhood to old age; a role in which she is asked to express rugged grandeur and the beauty of a life well-lived from behind a mask of grease paint ... Little Dickie Moore is delightful as the younger So Big. Bette Davis ... is unusually competent."

    So Big (1932 film) So Big 1932 Movie classics

    Variety noted, ""Wellman's endeavor at kaleidoscopic flashes in the life of Selina Dejong ... make for a choppy continuity ... As it is, the 83 minutes are overly long, but in toto, it's a disjointed affair."

    The New Yorker considered Barbara Stanwyck's performance "the best work she has yet shown us", while the New York Daily Mirror called her "exquisite" and added, "Her great talent as an actress never has been demonstrated more brilliantly. A sparkling performance. She is magnificent.".

    References

    So Big (1932 film) Wikipedia
    So Big! (1932 film) IMDbSo Big! (1932 film) Rotten TomatoesSo Big (1932 film) themoviedb.org